Eric Reid of the San Francisco 49ers kneels dugout the national anthem before the preseason game against the Minnesota Vikings on Aug. 27, 2017, at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis. (Hannah Foslien/Getty Images)

I posited that protest had sprouted a monetary achievement and an opportunity for an underserved community to benefit from the attention the protest garnered. I should’ve known that if San Francisco 49ers safety Eric Reid (who’s been boots on the ground with Colin Kaepernick since the beginning) and Harriot (a writer whose work I respect) weren’t behind the payout, then I should have had pause. Although both Harriot and I were conflicted about the news of the donation, I took the side that argued how the money could be put to good use.

Turns out I was on the wrong side of history, and the NFL is exactly who we all believed it to be. The money provided for the donation is going to be siphoned from the NFL’s funds for breast-cancer awareness and military-service initiatives, so it won’t cost the NFL a dime, according to Slate.

That’s pretty low, even for a group of old white billionaires.

“We didn’t agree with that, because we weren’t trying to cut other worthy programs,” Reid told Slate on Thursday, adding that he and several other players decided to leave the Players Coalition, headed by the Philadelphia Eagles’ Malcolm Jenkins and former wide receiver Anquan Boldin.

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This is a payoff at the highest level, and although the agreement wasn’t explicitly stated as quid pro quo, Jenkins has already noted that he won’t be protesting now that an agreement has been reached, according to ESPN. He said that he’s going to stop his protest, which he’s been carrying out by raising his fist since week 2 of the NFL season, as a show of good faith toward the NFL’s commitment to helping the inner city.

“[NFL Commissioner] Roger Goodell is trying to make this as easy for the owners to agree to as possible so that—again, their goal is to end the protests,” Reid said. “He’s trying to make it as easy [as] possible to do that for the owners. He’s going to present them with a proposal saying, ‘Look, you really don’t have to do anything. We’re just going to shift this money from this area and just move it here.’”

Slate notes that the Salute to Service program supports military personnel and raises “awareness for the sacrifices they make on our behalf.” Which means that the NFL owners, who have largely opposed the protests during the national anthem, even going so far as to label them un-American, would be taking money from a military program to shift money to social justice reforms. Which all seems a bit disingenuous.

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“We [players] made an agreement that there would be [a] task force that … would have all communications with the NFL,” Reid told Slate. “Malcolm stepped outside of that task force, he had another communication with the NFL, then [earlier this week] he [came] back and [said], ‘We are ready to announce the partnership on Thursday.’”

Reid continued: “When he asked me if I would end the protest in exchange for the donation and to announce the partnership for the proposal on Thursday, I was like, ‘Dude, no.’”

According to ESPN, Goodell was “furious” to learn that the players had not agreed to stop their protest after the proposed deal had been reached, even though there had been no agreed-upon deal that players would no longer protest if money was donated to social justice causes.

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Reid told Slate that he believes the expectation was that a generous donation would stop their protest.

Reid believes that there was, in fact, an expectation that players would stop their protests. He says that Jenkins told him “that he left the conversation [with a league official] with a strong feeling that once they made a monetary contribution, that they would expect us to stop protesting.”

Another issue that Reid had with the deal is that he doesn’t even believe the money was going to go to deserving causes.

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“It’s a charade,” Reid told Slate. “It’s basically going to be an NFL Cares,” he said, referring to a league public service announcement campaign that was rolled out whenever the NFL has a bad public image—e.g., domestic violence, CTE (chronic traumatic encephalopathy).

Reid added that the stipulations on the money also included the NFL having a say over how the money was allocated, meaning that if Reid and his NFL brethren believed that the money should be spent teaching an underserved community their rights when dealing with police, the NFL could decide that said money would be better spent making commercials showing that the NFL cares about social justice. So Reid wanted no part of what has been a sham at best.

“I feel like I would be a hypocrite not to use my platform to speak up for people who are facing oppression in this country,” he said. “I did it and I still do it because I believe it’s worth letting people know that if we do this together, if we stand up together, we can make change.”

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He added, “The end isn’t in sight in this country” when it comes to systematic oppression of minorities in the United States. “So, for me, protesting is the only way I feel comfortable with saying I’m doing the right thing.”